Research paper topics, free example research papers

Everyone Has The Right To Work, To Free Choice Of - 1,083 words
"Everyone has the right to work, to free choice of
employment, to just and favourable conditions of
work. . .Everyone has the right to a standard of
living adequate for the health and well-being of
himself and of his family, including food,
clothing, housing and medical care and necessary
social service." These are excerpts from the
Declaration of Human Rights. Written over 50 years
ago, the Declaration was created to give,
"inherent dignity and. . .equal and inalienable
rights of all members of the human family." The
Declaration gave hope to many people across the
globe who were living in tyranny and oppression,
hoping for equality and fair treatment.
Unfortunately for some, this document t ...
Related: free choice, human beings, child labor, human rights, facing

Everyone Has The Right To Work, To Free Choice Of - 1,033 words
... est problems facing sweatshop workers is the
conditions under which they must work. Sweatshops
vary in their conditions. One thing is certain
though, on a scale the best conditions start at
bad and the worst are judged as terrible. There is
no bright spot to the scale. But according to the
definition, (a workplace where workers are
exploited in their wages or benefits and are
subject to poor working conditions), the
conditions are, by most accounts, hazardous and
unsanitary. Typical conditions include sweltering
heat and crowded working environments. In
addition, in some cases there are not many fire
escapes, water fountains, restrooms and other
which are necessary to building codes. To ...
Related: free choice, corporate america, last year, college students, spoken

A Mind Is The Slave Of Passion Through Its Own Choice - 1,719 words
A Mind Is The Slave Of Passion Through Its Own
Choice While he may best be remembered for his
classic autobiography Confessions, St. Augustine
was also the author of The Problem of Free Choice,
which raises many questions and provides answers
for a plethora of questions regarding human life
and the ability to think. He titles one of the
sections of his book A Mind is the Slave of
Passion Through its Own Choice (MS). In this
section, he reveals many interesting thoughts on
human nature through dialogue between two
characters, Augustine and Evodious. (E. and A.)
St. Augustine looks to discuss reason, knowledge,
the concept of mind and control over it, and
passion. The conclusion that is reache ...
Related: free choice, human mind, passion, slave, st. augustine

Appleget 1 - 1,066 words
Appleget 1 Joseph Appleget Mr. Helle/ IB English
12 10/18/00 The Way We Live Our Lives In our
individual routines, each and every one of us
strives to be the best that we are capable of
being. How peculiar this is; we aim for similar
goals, yet the methods we enact are unique. Just
as no two people have the same fingerprint, no two
have identical theories on how to live life. While
some follow religious outlines to aspire to a
level of oral excellence, others pursue different
approaches. Toward the end of the
Nineteenth-Century and on through the
mid-Twentieth, a movement followed existentialism,
a philosophical theory of life, in order to
achieve such a level. Even though the idea of
existe ...
Related: nineteenth century, jean paul, ethical standards, insect, comprehend

Beyond The Problem Of Evil - 3,996 words
Beyond The Problem Of Evil evil Beyond the Problem
of Evil Introduction: The problem of evil is, in
my opinion, the best point of departure for a
fruitful dialogue between Christianity,
traditionally conceived, and those strands of
modern philosophy which have been
perceived--indeed, have sometimes perceived
themselves--as a threat to that tradition. As
such, I will attempt first, to outline the problem
of evil in the starkest terms possible, presenting
Augustine's approach to its solution followed by a
critical analysis; second, to present an
alternative approach to the questions which give
rise to the problem--an approach derived in large
part from Spinoza and Nietzsche; and, third, to
sho ...
Related: good and evil, falls short, human experience, free choice, referring

Buddha Vs Zarathustra - 536 words
Buddha Vs Zarathustra Buddha vs. Zarathustra Why
do people suffer? That is a question man has been
trying to answer for hundreds of years. Two men
attacked this question from very different angles.
Their names were Buddha and Zarathustra. Buddha
was an Indian and founded the eastern way of
thinking. Zarathustra was from Persia and believed
in a more western theology. Zarathustra was a
wealthy man that lived a normal life until he was
twenty years old. He left his family and wandered
the country for ten years. Finally an angel
appeared to him; the angel told Zarathustra that
there was only one God. This God was the creator
of the earth and everything good. He had a counter
part that was an ev ...
Related: buddha, zarathustra, right speech, good deeds, founded

Coming Out Of Gay Men And Lesbians - 1,111 words
... sexual gratification from a partner of the
same sex (Clark, 1997). This lifestyle is not
considered the norm, society and family members
usually frown it upon. They have also had to try
and overcome hostility from family members when
they refuse to accept their sexual orientation. It
has become easier for them to keep their choices a
secret and do not flaunt their preference in
public or on their jobs in fear of being
ridiculed. They feel that their private lives
should be kept behind close doors. By not "coming
out" they can keep their jobs, housing, dignity,
and take advantage of rights given to all citizens
in society. But many have chosen to fight back and
demand equal rights and tr ...
Related: lesbian women, ethical standards, spiritual experience, harcourt brace, resource

Comparison Of Theories - 1,574 words
Comparison Of Theories Comparison of Theories 2
Abstract This paper is a comparison of three
different viewpoints on the subject of
personality. Carl Jung, B.F. Skinner, and Carl
Rogers all had very different outlooks on what
defined someones personality. As an added feature
I have included myself as a theorist because my
views are also different from the previous
mentioned theorists. This paper will also look
briefly into the background of each theorist
because their views on life began in their
childhood. Amazingly you will notice the all had
similar backgrounds, but came up with completely
different ways of looking at life. Comparison of
Theories 3 Understanding Personality Personality
is ...
Related: comparison, carl jung, different situations, free choice, competitiveness

Critique Of Andrew Abbott - 2,069 words
... y are to do it (Abbott 1988: 184). The
emergence of new forms of jurisdictional
legitimacy has been warranted by cultural shifts
such as secularization, and changing cultural
values. This has led to a shift in professional
legitimation from a reliance on social origins and
character values to a reliance on scientization or
rationalization of technique and on efficiency of
service (Abbott 1988: 179). The ascent of the
modern university has been a great external force
behind the development of professions.
Universities have served as legitimators of
professional knowledge and expertise. They have
helped to generate new techniques of practice, and
have been the training ground for professio ...
Related: abbott, andrew, critique, professional development, social environment

Democracy Vs Dictatorship - 1,163 words
... still lives will be emotionally scarred
forever. The "great purge" from 1936 - 1939, began
with few show trials that symbolized fair justice
but never provided enough real evidence to base a
conviction on. These trials were for members of
the government who had supposedly plotted against
Joseph Stalin. Following these trials, the secret
police purged all institutions (education, media,
government) of possible threats to the communist
party, and sent millions of people to forced
labour camps. When this horror came to an end in
1939 it was too late for the millions of people
who died, completely innocent of any crime. It is
true that Stalin's reign enabled many people to
learn to read and ...
Related: democracy, dictatorship, direct democracy, house of representatives, life expectancy

Elizabethan Drama - 2,729 words
Elizabethan Drama Beyond New Historicism:
Marlowe's unnatural histories and the melancholy
properties of the stage Drew Milne The tradition
of the dead generations weighs like a nightmare on
the minds of the living. [1] There is no document
of culture which is not at the same time a
document of barbarism. And just as such a document
is not free from barbarism, barbarism also taints
the process of transmission ... [2] Recent
critical discussions of Elizabethan drama, above
all of Shakespeare, have centred around `new
historicism', a trend consolidated in critical
anthologies.[3] New historicism is characterised
by an interest in the historicity of texts and the
textuality of history, and by a ...
Related: drama, elizabethan, elizabethan drama, historical drama, different approaches

Euthanasia - 1,106 words
... oal in life to continue living. Our natural
reflexes and responses fit us to fight attackers,
flee wild animals and dodge out of the way of
trucks. In the daily lives, people exercise the
caution and care necessary to protect themselves
and the bodies are similarly structured for
survival. When one is cut, the blood clots, and
fibrogen is produced to start the process of
healing the wound. When one is sick, antibodies
are produced to fight against the alien organisms.
Hence, euthanasia does violence to this natural
goal of survival. It is literally acting against
nature because all the processes of nature are
bent towards the end of bodily survival. It is
enough to recognize that the hum ...
Related: euthanasia, easeful death, wild animals, nazi germany, saint

Foals: The First Year - 1,057 words
... ly in the sweat and 35 grams in the urine of a
horse at moderate work. Magnesium: The daily
magnesium requirement for maintenance has been
estimated at 6.8-mg/lb-body weight. For the
growing foal, Magnesium at0.57 g/lb body wt. gain
must be added to the maintenance requirement.
Potassium: Foals require up to 1% potassium in a
purified diet while mature horse require 0.4%
potassium in a natural diet (27 mg/lb body
weight). Most roughages contain * 1.5% potassium.
A diet containing * 35% roughage provides
sufficient potassium. Iron: The dietary
maintenance requirement for iron is estimated to
be 40ppm. For rapidly growing foals and pregnant
and lactating mares, the requirement is estimated ...
Related: first year, health care, proper nutrition, last time, magnesium

Free Will And Freud - 718 words
Free Will And Freud People are not free and do not
have freewill due to unseen forces within the
human mind and areas of the unconscious not aware
to us. There are arguments that go against the
principle of freewill in reference to the
unconscious. Many people who have done studies in
this area conclude that the unconscious can be
seen or measured, so it is able to exist.
According to Sigmund Freud, the unconscious does
exist and the areas of the human mind control and
affect our behavior. Freud also states because of
these forces, freewill is prevented. Freud
proposes three aspects of our personality that
prevent freewill. They are the ID, Ego, and the
Super Ego. Many People feel they are f ...
Related: free choice, free will, freud, sigmund freud, important role

God Nature Description - 1,880 words
God Nature Description So many people have a false
interpretation of who God really is. Understanding
who God really is can clear up a lot of false
pretences (ideas) that so many people have about
Him. According to the Bible, there are a number of
different names and interpretations for who God
truly is. WHO GOD REALLY IS! Yahweh *"Eternal God"
most common name used for God in the Old Testament
(6829 times) *The New Testament uses the word Lord
"He who is" "He who is truly present" "Yahweh is
not merely one god among many; he is the Creator
and Ruler of heaven and earth, who is worthy of
and demands the exclusive homage of his people "
Yahweh Rapha *"I am" "...for I am the Lord, who
heals yo ...
Related: different ways, tough times, hard times, exodus, wilderness

Hugo, Victor: Les Meserables Protaganist And Antaganists - 964 words
Hugo, Victor: Les Meserables Protaganist and
Antaganists In the novel Les Mesarables there are
both protagonists and antagonists in it. One of
the major protagonists is Jean Valjean. He was
once a bad character but now he has changed for
the good by the love and kindness shown to him by
one man has changed his whole life. And one of the
major antagonists is Thnenardier. From the
beginning we see all that can be bad inside of a
character, and later in the story he even tries to
kill Valjean to get money. Jean Valjean starts off
in the story as being a convict that has been in
the galleys for 19 years for stealing a loaf of
bread. But through the bishop's love and kindness
that he shows him ru ...
Related: good people, different types, real life, raising, jean

Hume - 2,205 words
... n this riposte to Cleanthes: Your theory
itself cannot surely pretend to any such
advantage; even though you have run into
anthropomorphism, the better to preserve a
conformity to common experience. Let us once more
put it to trial. In all instances which we have
ever seen, ideas are copied from real objects, and
are ectypal, not archetypal, to express myself in
learned terms: You reverse this order, and give
thought the precedence. In all instances which we
have ever seen, though has no influence upon
matter, except that matter is so conjoined with
it, as to have an equal reciprocal influence upon
it. Cleanthes makes no substantial reply, and
Demea the pietist comes to the stage with an ...
Related: hume, free choice, world view, promised land, remote

Is There A Moral Right To Abortion - 1,724 words
Is There A Moral Right To Abortion The tragedy of
an unwanted pregnancy that threatens a woman's
life or health existed in the ancient world as it
does today. At the time the Bible was written,
abortion was widely practiced in spite of heavy
penalties. The Hebrew scriptures had no laws
forbidding abortion. This was chiefly because the
Hebrews placed a higher value on women than did
their neighbors. There are, however, some
references to the termination of pregnancy. Exod.
21:22-25 says that if a pregnant woman has a
miscarriage as a result of injuries she receives
during a fight between two men, the penalty for
the loss of the fetus is a fine; if the woman is
killed, the penalty is life for ...
Related: abortion, abortion controversy, moral agent, moral decision, right to life

Marxism And Capitalism - 1,311 words
Marxism And Capitalism Modern Marxs theoretical
work is the understanding of the nature of human
beings and how they have constructed their
historical world. Marx is considered a modernist
because his views and theories fit the meaning of
Modernity, which are human freedom and the right
to free choice. To Marx, Capitalism is a barrier
to the notion of human freedom and choice. Five
aspects of his political theory which are modern
is how he views human nature, effects of
Capitalism on human natures with emphasis on
significance of labor, class struggles within
Capitalism, the demise of Capitalism and the need
for the transition to Communism. Marx belief of
human nature is that it changes over ...
Related: capitalism, marxism, changing world, surplus value, invest